One option is have temp buffer start some known size then increase it if see it's not enough with vsnprintf
. Are there better approach? Thanks
You can use vasprintf()
, but that does an unnecessary heap allocation - it's unlikely to be faster on average. Using alloca
you can avoid the heap. Or, you can write directly into the string
that's returned: NRVO should avoid a copy, and as of C++11 move semantics would limit the cost sans-NRVO to a few pointer swaps.
#include <cstdio>
#include <cstdarg>
#include <alloca.h>
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
std::string stringf(const char* format, ...)
{
va_list arg_list;
va_start(arg_list, format);
// SUSv2 version doesn't work for buf NULL/size 0, so try printing
// into a small buffer that avoids the double-rendering and alloca path too...
char short_buf[256];
const size_t needed = vsnprintf(short_buf, sizeof short_buf,
format, arg_list) + 1;
if (needed <= sizeof short_buf)
return short_buf;
// need more space...
// OPTION 1
std::string result(needed, ' ');
vsnprintf(result.data(), needed, format, arg_list);
return result; // RVO ensures this is cheap
OR
// OPTION 2
char* p = static_cast<char*>(alloca(needed)); // on stack
vsnprintf(p, needed, format, arg_list);
return p; // text copied into returned string
}
int main()
{
std::string s = stringf("test '%s', n %8.2f\n", "hello world", 3.14);
std::cout << s;
}
An simpler and initially faster option would be:
std::string result(255, ' '); // 255 spaces + NUL
const size_t needed = vsnprintf(result.data(), result.size() + 1,
format, arg_list);
result.resize(needed); // may truncate, leave or extend...
if (needed > 255) // needed doesn't count NUL
vsnprintf(result.data(), needed + 1, format, arg_list);
return result;
The potential problem is that you're allocating at least 256 characters however short the actual text stored: that could add up and cost you in memory/cache related performance. You might be able to work around the issue using [shrink_to_fit
]http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/string/basic_string/shrink_to_fit), but the Standard doesn't require it to actually do anything (the requirements are "non binding"). If you end up having to copy to a new exactly-sized string, you might as well have used the local char array.